Open Excel and right-click on the chart and select copy. Go to Word and paste the chart where you would like to see it on the page, then move the object, as desired.
Yes you can. You can copy the chart and then paste it into other files, such as Powerpoint slides or Word documents.
If you copy data from Excel and paste it into Word, then it will appear as a table in Word.
Word normally hosts data from Excel. It can display charts that are linked from Excel and will show data from Excel in tables in Word. A Paste Link can be set up, so that if the data changed in the Excel document, it will also change in the Word document.
Microsoft Word does not contain Excel or Powerpoint. The three come as separate applications with versions of Office 2003. So it is Office 2003 that contains Word, Excel and Powerpoint.
There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.
In Excel you calculate and have alarge number of formulae to perform a variety of operations on the numbers you put into clls. In Word you write text and format written documents.
Microsoft Excel is a worksheet. Microsoft Word is a word processor.
Usually a table, but it depends on what you copy.
please copy in ms word. then convert it
You can copy a table in Excel and paste it into Word. You will lose any formulas, but the resulting values will be retained. You can also link a Word document to a table in Excel, which will allow changes in the Excel table to be maintained in the Word document.
The best thing you can do is create one in another application and then copy and paste it into your Word document. Word also gives you an option to create charts inside it by inserting them into it. However they are limited, so it is better to do it another application.
=It can be possible most of the time it is..=